Needful Things by Stephen King, Judith Calder

Needful Things

by Stephen King and Judith Calder

With a demonic blend of malice and affection, Stephen King says farewell to Castle Rock, Maine, the town he put on the map. It is written by the author of "Carrie", "The Shining", "Night Shift", "The Stand", "Pet Sematary", "Misery", "It", "The Dark Half" and "Four Past Midnight".

Reviewed by Witty and Sarcastic Bookclub on

5 of 5 stars

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Needful Things takes place in Castle Rock, Maine, which is the setting for several of King's stories. It's a sleepy little town. At least, it would be if it hadn't been the site of some seriously bizarre violent happenings over the years. Leland Gaunt, a charming man, comes to town and opens a store called "Needful Things". It seems to be a curio shop, or an odd antique store. People from the town start coming in and, luckily for them, find the thing they most want.

Leland Gaunt sells things for an intriguing price- what the shopper can pay in cash plus one prank. Just a harmless little prank. Except, it's Castle Rock, Gaunt isn't who he seems, and suddenly these pranks have less than harmless consequences.

The idea is fascinating, Not because someone who deals in more than currency is a new idea; it's not. But someone who uses pranks as currency is very original and the way the story progressed is unique. I've never heard any version of the Peddler who deals in that sort of trade. So, right away, I was intrigued.

Stephen King is an incredibly talented writer, no one will deny that. At times, I did feel like there were too many background characters, and there were a few parts that I think could have been condensed (for example, there were multiple Elvis Presley sexual fantasies, which seemed redundant). Overall, though, I really liked it. By the end, the story was barreling along at a breakneck pace and taking me with it.

See full review at wittyandsarcasticbookclub.blogspot.com

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 29 August, 2018: Finished reading
  • 29 August, 2018: Reviewed